Hey, What Happened To That Maxine Waters Ethics Trial?

Rep. Maxine Waters (D-CA) was supposed to have faced trial for ethics violations last year, but the trial was suddenly delayed until after the November 2010 elections.

Waters stands accused of obtaining $12 million in TARP money for the bank OneUnited, on whose board her husband Sidney Williams once sat, and in which he owned more than $350,000 in stock. According to a story by the Washington Post in September of last year, Waters -- together with Rep. Barney Frank, (D-MA) who was then the chairman of the House Financial Services Committee -- changed a law and obtained the financing.

Her trial was delayed because new evidence had supposedly come to light. What that evidence is was not specified. But according to a story on SFGate.com, at least part of that evidence was an email from her grandson Mikael Moore, who is also her chief of staff:

The e-mail never mentioned OneUnited. Moore's memo said Waters was "under the explicit impression" that provisions affecting small and minority-owned banks were still in the bailout bill …

Rep. Barney Frank, D-Mass., chairman of the Financial Services Committee, said in an interview that he inserted the provision for minority banks to protect OneUnited -- because it is based in his state.

He said of Waters, "We never discussed it."

The provision sought by Waters -- and inserted by Frank -- told the Treasury Department that it should consider -- for bailout money -- banks that had an asset size of $1 billion or less, and whose size dropped to a lower range because they owned devalued preferred stock in Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.

All of that is true, but the only bank that language would affect was OneUnited.

OneUnited has had its own share of trouble. As PJM reported in late September of last year, Rep. Darrell Issa (R-CA), the then-ranking member and current chairman of the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform, sent a letter to the chairman of the FDIC demanding to know if they maintained a list of banks with connections to prominent members of Congress or the media -- and if OneUnited was on the list. PJM went so far as to send a FreedomofInformationAct request to FDIC demanding the list in question or proof it did not exist. The request was flatly denied. PJM then sent a second, more specific FOIA request, and to date has not received a response.